Landmark Supreme Court cases

From A+ Club Lesson Planner & Study Guide

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Short list of Landmark Supreme Court cases[edit | edit source]

  • cases as generally recommended for core study for the AP Gov exam
  • review of additional cases will yield greater student comprehension and analysis
Case Date Court Big Ideas/ Court Doctrine Constitutional Issues Issues / Background / Description / Opinion / Dissent Related Cases
Baker v. Carr 1961 Warren - "One person one vote" standard

- Political Question doctrine

  • Equal protection clause (14th amendment)
  • Judicial review
  • ruled that the state of Tennessee had ignored a 1901 state law that required redistricting to be adjusted according to census results
  • the state had not drawn new districts since 1901, resulting in overrepresentation of rural over urban citizens
  • held that challenges to state districting (gerrymandering) issues were not merely "political questions" and thus subject to Court review
  • the Court was split on the case and the case had to be re-argued
  • dissents:
    • Justice Brennan argued that redistricting is a political question and should be left up to the states
    • Justice Frankfurter held that the decision was "judicial overreach"
  • Reynolds v. Sims (1964)
  • Shaw v. Reno , 1993)
Marbury v. Madison 1803 Marshall Judicial supremacy
  • Judicial review
  • Original jurisdiction (Article III, Section 2)
  • "legal remedy" concept [1]
  • unanimous decision that settled a dispute between outgoing Adams and incoming Jefferson administrations over Adams' "midnight appointments", including one to Marbury
  • ruled that Section 13 of the Judiciary Act of 1793 was illegal under the Constitution, thus establishing "judicial review"
  • created the power of the Courts to invalidate statutory laws based upon their "constitutionality" - Marbury lost his case, as the Court ruled that any legal remedy due to him was from an invalid law
  • Marshall quoted Federalist No. 78 by Hamilton, "... that an act of the legislature, repugnant to the constitution, is void."[2]
McColluch v. Maryland 1819 Marshall implied powers
  • Supremacy clause (Article VI)
  • Necessary and proper clause
  • Maryland tried to stop the Baltimore branch of the Second National Bank by taxing it
  • the Court ruled that the National Bank was legitimate and superseded (was over) state law, thus Maryland could not tax it
  • the Court ruled that if the National Bank was legal (constitutional) measures to implement it were also Constitutional via the "necessary and proper clause"
  • additionally, if a federal law was legal it is also "supreme" (Article VI) over state law
  • Marshall's ruling denied 10th amendment reservations of unexpressed powers
Brown v. Board of Education 1954 Warren equal protection Equal protection clause (14th amendment)
  • unanimous ruling held that segregated schools were "inherently unequal" and thus violated the 14th amendment's equal protection clause regarding public school segregation
  • the ruling did not completely overturn Plessy, as Brown applied only to public education, but it became the primary precedent for further challenges to de jure (in law) segregation
  • subsequent cases also addressed de facto (in fact or practice) segregation
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission 2010 Roberts campaign finance law Free speech clause (1st amendment)
  • held that "political spending" by organizations is protected speech
  • the case regarded advertising of a movie during a primary election season that was critical of Hillary Clinton and that violated a 2002 law, Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act that prohibited "electioneering communication" by corporations, non-profits or unions withing 30 days of a primary or 60 days of an election; the law was invalidated by the case
Engel v. Vitale 1962 Warren - prayer in public school

- "separation of Church and State" doctrine

Establishment clause (1st amendment)
  • ruled that official public school prayer (i.e., school-sponsored) violated the 1st amendment prohibition of government sponsored religion
  • the ruling affirmed the "wall of separation between Church and State," which is from a published letter by President Thomas Jefferson in 1802
  • dissent:
    • Justice Stewart's argued that the Establishment clause prohibited creation of a state- (government) sponsored church and not the non-mandatory practice of religion within a public school
Gideon v. Wainwright 1963 Warren - public counsel

- incorporation case

Right to counsel (6th amendment)
  • Gideon requested but was denied a public attorney (Florida only allowed it for capital offenses)
  • the unanimous decision held that
  • Powell v. Alabama (1932: required state-sponsored counsel in capital crimes; it importantly incorporated the 6th amendment right via the 14th amendment's "due process" clause)

for similar cases regarding criminal protections:

  • Massiah v. United States (1964: prohibited use of statements by criminals who had counsel without that attorney present)
- incorporation case asdf
  • asdf


Full list of Landmark Supreme Court cases[edit | edit source]

Landmark Supreme Court cases: alphabetical[edit | edit source]

Landmark Supreme Court cases: by date & historical era[edit | edit source]

Landmark Supreme Court cases: by topic[edit | edit source]

  1. Marshall invoked (referenced) the ancient Roman legal maxim ubi jus, ibi remedium for "where there is a legal right, there is a legal remedy"
  2. Note that Hamilton did not envision Judicial review, instead arguing that the Congress must avoid unconstitutional unto itself.
  3. In this case the Court upheld a challenge to a law's constitutionality, in that a tax on carriages did not violate the Constitution. Marbury was not decided on this precedent, however, Chief Justice Roberts cited Hylton in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012)